"Not Just a Business Deal, It's a Data Grab": Privacy Advocates Sound Alarm on Google's Acquisition of FitBit

September 10, 2020 Off By HotelSalesCareers

Google’s announcement Friday that it intends on acquiring digital fitness tracker maker Fitbit has raised the eyebrows of privacy advocates in the U.S. and U.K. who say regulators should oppose the deal.

“This is not just a business deal, it’s a data grab—and that should worry us all,” Tom Watson, the Labour Party’s digital, culture, media, and sport secretary, wrote to the U.K’s Competition and Markets Authority.

The two companies announced the intended $2.1 billion deal last week Friday. Reuters first reported the deal. 

As Reuters reported,

The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), in a statement on Monday, pointed to (pdf) Fitbit and Google’s tack record as cause for concern.

“First, Fitbit gathers sensitive personal data that should not be transferred to others,” said EPIC president Marc Rotenber. “Last year, the Department of Defense prohibited military personnel from using geolocation features on their fitness devices because of privacy and security concerns.”

SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT